![]() They’re just so good at driving away most users who’re new to GNU/Linux and doing some heavy damages to the GNU/Linux platform in general. The way I see Fedora is that, most of those people behind its community aren’t concerned about the ‘collective freedom’ but only the freedom of their own. If you’re someone who love Fedora, then I hope that my words have not offend your or anything, but, in my personal opinion ( I’ve been using Fedora even before it became Fedora, haven’t used a lot of recent releases to be honest), with both Fedora and Gnome (they have a pretty close relationship/characteristics), nothing has changed!. The default software manager too sucks when comparing with Debian’s awesome and powerful apt-get based ‘Synaptic’ because I searched for ‘pdf viewer’ in it, and it gave me a huge number of totally irrelevant results (not for just that term, the index is not polished in general), the installer’s user interface (aka ‘Anaconda’) looked like a 5 year old’s drawing (unusually big, looks cluttered etc), having issues while using the administrator password as sometimes the screen seems to be stuck etc etc. Everyone said it’s so cool and gives you a ‘pure’ Gnome Shell experience … and you know what, they’re right about that ‘pure Gnome Shell experience’ thing because the entire OS behaves so much like Gnome Shell and gives you (or at least to me) a little taste of ‘hell’.įor example, the fonts look really ugly and there’s no way you can change them (unless you install ‘gnome-tweak-tool’ which requires an Internet connection) and it makes windows and menu’s look pretty big under my ‘decent’ 1366×768 resolution, where both Unity and Windows 7 look great!. Now I’m not even gonna talk about this because to be honest, after trying the latest Fedora 17, I’m a bit pissed. ![]() But when you right click on the Gnome 3 desktop, nothing happens, why? because it’s disabled. In the past, when you right click on the desktop, you could create a folder, document, copy-paste files or change the desktop background etc. Unlike with the classic version, the ‘new’ Gnome Shell does not come with a desktop right click menu.
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